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Post by Vladik on Dec 24, 2004 21:20:28 GMT -5
There are many facets of 68k Assembly. Let yourself be heard as you discuss it with joy.
Don't forget to get an [glow=red,2,300][shadow=blue,left,300]ACCOUNT![/shadow][/glow]
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Post by bfr on Dec 28, 2004 15:11:33 GMT -5
What kinds of assembly does the ti-86 accept. What is 68-K assembly? Is it faster or slower than the other kninds?
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Post by Vladik on Dec 28, 2004 20:21:07 GMT -5
68k Assembly is Assembly for the 68k calculators! The TI-86 uses TI-86-series Z80 assembly, for is is a Z80 calculator! A 68k calculator is a calculator that uses a Motorola 68000 processor; the TI-89/89 Ti/92+/V200. A Z80 calculator is a calculator that uses a Z80 chip by Some Company, ie. the TI-82/83/83+/83+SE/84+/84+ and some other outdated calculators that you only/u] buy on E-Bay for about $20. Also, the TI-73, but that is a middle-school calculator that is overly basic!
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Post by bcherry on Jan 7, 2005 1:08:41 GMT -5
z80 is a ZiLog processor I believe.
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Post by Vladik on Jan 7, 2005 16:49:30 GMT -5
ZiLog... That sounds so familiar...
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Post by Simon on Jan 23, 2005 20:31:40 GMT -5
me too it sound familiar
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Post by Vladik on Jan 28, 2005 22:23:22 GMT -5
I think that I might have read it somewhere...
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Post by bfr on Mar 8, 2005 20:39:13 GMT -5
I remember a long time ago when I didn't know what a Z80 processor was. So long ago...
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Post by Vladik on Mar 9, 2005 21:24:07 GMT -5
Haha... we were so young when we didn't know about graphing calculaotrs... I think that the first time when I saw a graphing calculator was when I was in fifth grade and my math teacher showed me the TI-82. I thought that it was amazing. But at the time, I also thought that the graphing functions were complicated...
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Post by bfr on Mar 10, 2005 16:25:01 GMT -5
By 6th grade, (last year), I good program games on my TI-86.
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